Language is shaped by history, and French history is full of fascinating facts. Here at Superprof, we want to make sure you know as much as possible about French culture.

Fun Facts About the French Language

Are you eager to learn French? Have you already booked French classes at the Alliance Francaise or a Superprof tutor? Here are some interesting facts about the languages of France:

French is a Romance language, meaning it evolved mostly from Latin.

Before Julius Caesar invaded Gaul and Latin became the administrative language, the language spoken by the Gauls was a Celtic language called Gaulish

The King of France Charlemagne did not learn to read as a child. He learned when he was an adult and promoted the founding of schools to increase literacy.

In the Middle Ages, there were two main dialects of French called the Langue d’Oc (which gave its name to a French region in the south of France, the Languedoc-Rousillon) and the Langue d’Oil. The names of these languages are based on their word for “yes”.

The French word for a novel is a “roman” – these were the first books written in the French language, also called “Roman”, rather than Latin. They were tales of chivalry and adventure.

French pidgin languages combining the grammar and vocabulary of French and a local language are called “creoles”. There are creoles spoken in Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana and various African countries.

The first French dictionary dates to 1606, the first grammar textbook to 1531.

The dying Gaul from this famous Roman statue would have spoken Gaulish. The French language evolved primarily from Latin. Photo credit: Xuan Che on Visual hunt

French History Facts: Kingdom, French Republic, Empire and a Colonial Power

Kingdom of the Franks

With the disintegration of the Roman Empire, Germanic tribes established new states throughout Europe. One such tribe was the Franks, ruled by the Merovigian dynasty. The earliest real king of the Franks was probably Childeric I., supposedly the son of the mythic founder of the dynasty Merovech. Childeric’s son Clovis became famous for converting to Christianity in 496.

Following the Merovingian dynasty came the Carolingians and the first de facto French empire, though it was not called by that name. Under Charlemagne, the Franks ruled over most of mainland Europe stopping at the Baltic states in the East, the border with Denmark to the North and excluding Spain to the southwest.

The last dynasty to rule over France was the Bourbons. They first ascended the throne in 1589, a cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty that first ascended the throne in 987.

A Republic, Directory and Consulate

Unlike America, which had a plan for after its Revolution in 1792, France just sort of stumbled into democracy. What started as a series of revolts for adequate representation in the people’s council and over poverty and inflation quickly escalated beyond the storming of the Bastille, with demagogues such as Marat and Robespierre catching the imagination of the French population during the French Revolution and instigating witch hunts for those opposing freedom (a vague concept, ensuring that the guillotine never slept.)

At first, France was aiming for a constitutional monarchy, though they brought King Louis XVI from the palace of Versailles to the Louvre in Paris to keep a better eye on him, but when he betrayed their trust by trying to flee to Austria with his wife Marie Antoinette, that idea was scrapped under the blade of the guillotine. It then tried a Directory, which mostly didn’t function, until Napoleon Bonaparte decided to help instigate a coup and install a triumvirate, of which he was First Consul.

First Empire

With deft political manoeuvering, Napoleon set up a vote that almost unanimously decided to make France an Empire (the Directoire had already been busy bothering the neighbours by invading Italy and annexing Belgium and the Netherlands) under its first official Emperor, a young general from Corsica, Napoleon I.

Napoleon Bonaparte is a much-hated figure in England, but while the French are aware of his less-than-stirling treatment of conquered populations, they can’t help admiring his vision. Photo credit: Onasill ~ Bill Badzo on Visual hunt

Napoleon continued his expansionist policy, annexing southern Germany and continuing his campaign in Italy. Secure in the support of Russia, which until then had been an ally, he invaded Spain.

There, he was ultimately pushed back by General Wellesley, while on the other front Russia and a coalition led by Prussia ensured his defeat in 1814.

The Second French Empire

Still unsure of what it wanted, France decided to try monarchy again, installing a brother of Louis XVI, also called Louis (XVIII), as a constitutional monarch. His reign was interrupted by a brief return to power by the Corsican Napoleon Bonaparte, who was defeated at Waterloo and sent in exile to St. Helena.

After two more monarchs (Charles X and Louis-Philippe), France decided to try a Republic again. It elected Napoleon’s nephew Louis-Napoleon as the first President of France.

Unfortunately, the new constitution did not allow him tostand for election to serve a second term – and so he declared himself Emperor.

France is now on its Fifth Republic

Rise and Fall of a Colonial Power

The first wave of colonisation in the 17th century centred on North America (Nouvelle-France with Québec and Lousiana), South America (the Caribbean and French Guiana), the islands around Madagscar as a stopover for the India trade and, only mildly successfully, India itself.

A series of wars and disadvantageous treaties greatly reduced the French holdings, though some, such as the Seychelles, were restored at the end of the Napoleonic Wars.

The French colony of Louisana was ceded to Spain in the Treaty of Fountainebleau, only to be returned throught he Treaty of Ildefonso twenty yers later. It was then sold to the young United States. Photo credit: denisbin on Visualhunt.com

The Directoire and Consulat both took action to secure land outside of Europe, most notably in North Africa, but the secondwave of expansionism started under Napoleon III. France ended up with most of northwest Africa and holdings in Vietnam and Cambodia.

Decolonisation

The colonies survived two further French republics, though dissatisfaction was growing. It wasn’t until after World War II that the Départements D’outre-Mer (overseas departments) were created, allowing some of the ex-colonies (such as Guadeloupe and Martinique) to become an official part of France.

Of the remaining territories, (for example, French Polynesia) some became independent, and others recieved a special status in the French Republic, first as the Overseas Territories, and since 2007 as the Overseas Collectivities with semi-independent status. Learn more about the French Empire with our blog on French Colonial Empire.

French Fact: French is Spoken in About 30 Different Countries Worldwide

French is still spoken in all the DOMs and COMs, where it is the official language (or one of them), but many of the ex-colonies and territories have kept French as one of their official languages, including the Indian regions of Puducherry and Chantannagar, where it is an administrative language. In fact, many of the colonies lost before the 20th century still speak French in some form or other, such as Quebec and some parts of Louisiana.

In Europe, French persists in regions once (or twice, or several times more) belonging to France, such as Belgium and parts of Switzerland. The population of several of the European microstates in the European Union speak French as well:

Monaco in the southalong the French Riviera

Luxembourg, alongside Strasbourg and Brussels a capital of the European Union

Andorra (though here it is not an official language) in the Pyrenees mountains

There is even a little corner of Britain where a French dialect is still spoken by some of the inhabitants: the English Channel islands, where they speak a version of the dialect spoken in Normandie.

More Fun Facts About France They Didn’t Teach You In School

The French island of the Mont Saint Michel is accessible on foot by low tide

The French coast of Normandy has a most spectacular tidal phenomenon. When the tide goes out, it reveals kilometres of sandy beaches and leaves a land bridge to a small island with a monastery and a town. Of course, now you can access the Mont Saint Michel at high tide, too, by means of a bridge connecting it to the mainland. It is one of the most beautiful places in France and one of the most visited along the coastline of Normandy.

The first programmable machine was made in France

When we think of computer progress, we think of Silicon Valley, but the first programs were for a mechanical loom invented by the French draper in Lyon, Joseph Marie CharlesJacquard. Jacquard was well known for its woven designs, and found a way to use punch-cards on a roll to tell their mechanical loom how to adjust it sheds and shuttles to make the patterns automatically. Tourists who travel to France can visit an original at the Musée des Tissus et des Art Décoratifs in Lyon.

The first computer programme was written by Ada Lovelace, Byron’s daughter, for English inventor Charles Babbage’s Analytical Engine. And all without electricity.

Parallel Popes in France

For a time, the Papal Seat was not in Rome, but in Avignon, a city along the Mediterrannean. A disagreement between the French crown and the papacy culminated in the French king Phillip IV being excommunicated and killing Pope Boniface VIII in retaliation. Boniface’s successor, Benedict XI, reigned about a year before dying under mysterious circumstances. His successor, Clement V, was French and decided to leave Rome to live in France in 1309. Avignon remained the papal seat for the next 67 years, with 7 popes reigning from the Palais des Papes, until Gregory XI returned to Rome in 1376.

After Gregory’s death, a disagreement between the elector cardinals and Gregory’s successor, Urban VI, led to the establishment of a parallel lines of popes (called anti-popes) in Avignon. Two anti-popes resided there, Clement VII and Benedict XIII. The latter was unpopular even with the French, and he was forced to flee to Perpignan. There were other anti-popes after him, but he was the last living in France to reside in the papal palace of Avignon.

The Avignon popes lived in splendid palaces within the French city. By Jean-Marc Rosier from http://www.rosier.pro, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4837734

The papal palace – actually two palaces joined together – is the largest Gothic building dating to the Middle Ages. You can still visit it as a tourist in Avignon today, where it doubles (or triples) as a tourist attraction/conference centre, research centre and exhibition hall. A must-see for your next trip to France! You can take the high speed train from Paris to Marseille and be there i a few hours.

There are WWI battlefields in France still unaccessible to the public

There are still miles of trenches and open battlefield zones in certain regions in France from World War I that are off-limits to the public and where no agriculture is permitted because the soil is so saturated with the chemicals used in the various gas weapons and the concentration of bodies buried there is so high that the soil is toxic. This means that even escargot and frogs legs are off the table, and the geese for the foie gras can’t be fed from anything that grows there.

However, when visiting France there are other World War I battlefields that are accessible, where you can visit the trenches and see how the soldiers lived,